Student artists to serve the greater good?

It all started over a year ago when Lesley Jackson, a student at the School of
the Art Institute of Chicago, came up with the idea of building and restoring
furniture for refugees for a class project.

But it soon evolved to more than an idea, turning into a group of five SAIC
students called Furnishing for Refugees.

Lesley Jackson, Natalie Murray, Jeffly Gabriela Molina, Prima Sakuntabhai and
Robert Lococo all have the same goal: exercising their creative and technical
skills to benefit a community in need.

“The idea for this project came from an interest in contributing to the
community but also building my own skills, finding ways to reuse materials, and
make functional work that was also creative but simple and efficient,” Jackson
said.

Jackson was the one to reach out last spring to Refugee One – a refugee
resettlement agency that provides services to help newly arrived refugees in
Chicago – to ask them if they would be interested in the project.

Laura Lonneman, the housing and compliance manager at Refugee One, declined to comment
on that collaboration but was extremely excited about it and really
encouraging, according to Jackson.

However, it took a while for the students to gather as a group so the project
wasn’t implemented right away.

“I knew I couldn’t do it on my own, I knew I needed to reach out to other
people, but I had to find the right group of people,” Jackson said. “It just
seemed too big to get to do. I just thought it was too lofty.”

The group was eventually formed, uniting four women and one man with great
constructional skills and an interest in community-based practices.

“I think all of us share the same interest, and all of us have art backgrounds,
but we all make a lot of functional things too,” said Heather Mullins, the
advisor of the project, who was chosen by the students for her experience in
design and community-based work.

Lonneman, of Refugee One, helped the group create a list of what would be
necessary to furnish a home.

“And then we just started picking pieces that we were interested in
constructing,” Jackson said. “We started with the dining table because we
thought that this was sort of the center of the home.”

The goal of the group is to construct furniture that could house a family of
four by the end of May.

“We are basically trying to do everything but the bed,” Jackson said.

Before the construction, all of the designs go through Mullins so she can give
advice on how to make the furniture and choose the construction materials
better.

“And that’s where Heather [Mullins] comes in. Really what’s important is that
since there are so many different people working on projects, we don’t want one
piece really standing out and not really fitting,” Jackson said.

Creating furniture for a group of people as specific as refugees also involves
special considerations.

“One of the things that I am learning through this experience is that we have
to, as Heather [Mullins] said, make something that won’t be too crazy, that can
be just “homey,” well-made and comfortable for these families that are coming,”
said Molina, one of the group members who comes from Venezuela.

And choosing the right construction materials is another issue as well.

It’s a constant conversation about what material should be used, according to
Murray, another member of the group.

“We have to make side tables and we were just discussing: wood, metal and what
if we implemented glass? But then you have to think: ‘Oh but glass could be
really heavy, and then what about metal?’” Murray said.

These student artists chose to use mostly reclaimed materials but also pieces
donated by their own families.

For instance, the dining table constructed a few days ago was made from an old
doorframe and oak floorboards and has detachable steel legs.

The group is thinking of opening the project to other students who would be
interested in joining and who would not necessarily be skilled in furniture
construction. For example, a ceramist could construct a set of dishware for the
families or an artist-painter could paint the walls, Jackson explained.

But the group of five also doesn’t want too many people to be involved.

“There would be too many cooks in the kitchen,” Murray said.

In the end, Furnishing for Refugees cannot be summarized as only involving student
artists who are exercising their creative skills. In fact, there is a complete
philosophy behind this project, and a quest for a unique way of thinking to
influence the project..

“We are trying to rethink what the artist role is,” Jackson said. “Why can’t we
be makers and creative thinkers but also socially engaged people? It is about
thinking critically about what we should be making, what we should be putting
out there.”